The last taboo

From Shakespeare: The Biography by Peter Ackroyd (2005):

The apparent ordinariness of extraordinary men and women is one of the last great taboos of biographical writing. It would not do to admit that nineteen-twentieths of a life, however great or enchanted, is plain and unexciting and not to be distinguished from the life of anyone else. But there should be a further admission. The behaviour and conversation of even the most powerful writer, or statesman, or philosopher, will in large part be no more than average or predictable. There is not much to differentiate the mass of humankind, except for some individual action or production.

9 thoughts on “The last taboo

      • Samuel Johnson’s conversation, at least as we have it from Boswell and others, seems to have been consistently very high rate. I can believe he’d be the kind of guy who almost everything he said was interesting.

        Wouldn’t talking to Henry VIII be like listening to a loudmouth most of the time? I know he’s the kind of guy I wouldn’t want to be around, and he seems to have been a more regular “type” (the bully) than someone personally exceptional.

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